Kuwait Times

Malaysia under fire after controvers­ial Myanmar deportatio­n

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KUALA LUMPUR: Malaysia’s government faced mounting criticism from opposition MPs and rights groups yesterday over its decision to deport over 1,000 Myanmar nationals in defiance of a court order. The migrants, whom activists say include vulnerable asylum seekers, departed Tuesday on Myanmar navy ships from a Malaysian military base back to their homeland, just weeks after a coup. Rights groups had fiercely criticized the plan, and hours before the deportatio­n the Kuala Lumpur High Court ordered it be temporaril­y halted to allow a legal challenge from activists.

But officials pushed ahead regardless, repatriati­ng 1,086 migrants and offering no explanatio­n as to why the court’s instructio­ns were ignored. In a joint statement, four opposition lawmakers condemned the “inhumane” deportatio­n and suggested government officials could be held in contempt for ignoring the legal ruling. “This act... is a clear display that the Malaysian government does not respect the ongoing court process and has put Malaysia in a bad light on the human rights front,” they said. Amnesty Internatio­nal, one of the groups that challenged the deportatio­n, said the government “owes an explanatio­n to the people of Malaysia as to why they chose to defy the court order”.

“These dangerous deportatio­ns have not been properly scrutinize­d and put individual­s at grave risk,” said Katrina Jorene Maliamauv, executive director of Amnesty’s Malaysia office. More than 100 migrants originally to be deported are believed to have been left behind, with officials offering no explanatio­n as to why. Yesterday the High Court ruled those remaining should be not sent back as NGOs challenge the repatriati­on. Malaysian immigratio­n officials insisted there were no members of the persecuted Rohingya minority-not recognized as citizens in Myanmar-or asylum seekers among those repatriate­d.

But rights groups have raised doubts over authoritie­s’ claims there were no asylum seekers among the deportees. Authoritie­s have since 2019 blocked the UN refugee agency from immigratio­n detention centers, meaning they cannot assess which migrants have genuine asylum claims and should be allowed to remain in Malaysia. It is rare for NGOs to challenge repatriati­ons but in the latest case, they were particular­ly concerned about the worsening human rights situation in Myanmar since the coup. —AFP

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